Did bin Laden’s code name slur Native Americans?

Geronimo. The U.S. Senate Indian Affairs Committee didn’t know when it scheduled a hearing on racial stereotypes that members would have such an emotionally charged example to discuss. But the use of the Apache leader’s moniker as a code name for Osama bin Laden has appalled many Native Americans and drawn calls for an apology.

A legendary warrior, Geronimo was known for his ability to walk without leaving footprints, allowing him to evade thousands of Mexican and U.S. soldiers, much like bin Laden evaded capture for the past decade.

But for Native Americans, there’s an important difference: Geronimo was a hero — not a terrorist.

The issue has resulted in statements of disapproval from tribal leaders, scores of angry comments on social network sites and a call for President Barack Obama to apologize.

Thursday’s hearing was scheduled long before details about the Geronimo code name became public. However, the committee will address the matter, said Loretta Tuell, staff director and chief counsel for the committee.

Many Native Americans say that while they are angered, they are not surprised. They say the code name is yet another insult in a long, tumultuous history with the federal government.

“We’ve been oppressed for so long, it just doesn’t matter anymore,” said Leon Curley, a Navajo and Marine veteran from Gallup, N.M. “The government does what it wants when it wants. The name calling is going to stay around forever. But when you think about it, this is an insult.”

Even Jeff Houser, chairman of Geronimo’s Fort Sill Apache Tribe, noted in a letter to Obama that the decision behind the code name stemmed from an ongoing cultural disconnect, not malice. But the damage is the same.

“We are quite certain that the use of the name Geronimo as a code for Osama bin Laden was based on misunderstood and misconceived historical perspectives of Geronimo and his armed struggle against the United States and Mexican governments,” Houser wrote.

“However, to equate Geronimo or any other Native American figure with Osama bin Laden, a mass murderer and cowardly terrorist, is painful and offensive to our Tribe and to all Native Americans.”

The White House referred questions on the matter to the U.S. Defense Department, which said no disrespect was meant to Native Americans.

The department wouldn’t elaborate on the use of Geronimo’s name but said code names typically are chosen randomly and allow those working on a mission to communicate without divulging information to adversaries.

The Apaches are not alone when it comes to battling the impact of stereotypes.

The Seminole Tribe of Florida is still waiting to for an apology from Obama over a court brief filed earlier this year that compared the tribe’s ancestors to al-Qaida. The Defense Department clarified the use of the Seminole reference, but it wasn’t enough for the tribe, Chairman Mitchell Cypress said in a letter to the president Wednesday.

“Once again, our nation’s native people were categorized as terrorists,” he wrote, referring to the Geronimo code name. “The time has never been more appropriate and necessary for you to issue an apology to Native America.”

The U.S. military has a long tradition of naming weapons and helicopters after American Indian tribes, chiefs and artifacts, a policy that became official with a 1969 Army regulation. The rule was later rescinded, but a 2009 Army Times article said the practice continues today “as a way to honor America’s war fighter heritage.”

The military also has a history with the word Geronimo; American paratroopers in World War II started using it as a war cry in the early 1940s. It’s possible they picked up the term from the Paramount Pictures movie “Geronimo!” — about a West Point graduate and his Army regiment’s attempt to capture the warrior — which was released around the same time.

The reason behind the name’s use in the bin Laden raid has been the subject of much speculation.

Some think it’s because the al-Qaida leader, like Geronimo, was able to elude capture for so many years. Others say it’s because the government considered both men terrorists, and some have suggested the guerrilla-style raid on bin Laden’s compound was reflective of the Apache’s fighting techniques.

Louis Maynahonah, a Navy veteran and chairman of the Apache Tribe of Oklahoma, said he doesn’t believe the code name was meant to be derogatory. He pointed to the name’s use as a paratrooper war cry and to the fleets of military aircraft named after Indian tribes, including the Apache helicopter.

“It’s symbolic to me of the Army at the time trying to capture Geronimo,” he said of the code name. “They had a heck of time because he used to slip back across the Mexican border. This bin Laden has been slipping from us for 10 years.”

Whatever the reason behind it, many in Indian Country say the code name was simply a bad choice that opened old wounds.

“The name Geronimo is arguably the most recognized Native American name in the world, and this comparison only serves to perpetuate negative stereotypes about our peoples,” the Onondaga Nation Council of Chiefs said in a statement issued Tuesday.

“The U.S. military leadership should have known better,” said the council, from the Onondaga Nation near Syracuse, N.Y.

Morning Star Gali, a member of the Pit River Tribe in California, agreed. Part of Gali’s family is descended from Geronimo’s tribe, and she has made it a point to share that history with her three young children.

“We definitely try to instill who our heroes were and who Geronimo was and what he represented to our people and the sacrifices and struggles that they made for us to be here today,” said Gali, a community liaison coordinator with the International Indian Treaty Council.

Navajo Nation President Ben Shelly said he would like to see the Obama administration and the Pentagon change the code name “so that U.S. history books will not continue to portray negative stereotypes of Native Americans and that America’s youth will remember Geronimo as one of our greatest war heroes.”

Geronimo is a legend among Apaches and other tribes for the fierce fighting he brought on during the 19th century as he tried to protect his land, his people and their way of life from encroachment by U.S. and Mexican armies.

After the families of Geronimo and other warriors were captured and sent to Florida, he and 35 warriors surrendered to Gen. Nelson A. Miles near the Arizona-New Mexico border in 1886. Geronimo eventually was sent to Fort Sill in Oklahoma, where he died of pneumonia in 1909.

Lawmakers’ consideration of how racial stereotypes impact native people marks an important step toward healing the tragic history of Native Americans, said Tina Osceola, a representative of the Seminole chairman.

“If we are carelessly stereotyped as enemies of the state by the highest levels of government, then how will our voices ever be relevant,” she said. “That is not the change we expected and were promised by this president.”

Gali hopes the Senate committee presses for remedies, including an apology from the government.

“There are a number of steps that can be taken,” she said. “Racism is very ingrained, and there’s a long way to go to be able to make it right.”

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Associated Press researcher Rhonda Shafner in New York contributed to this report.

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Susan Montoya Bryan can be reached at http://twitter.com/susanmbryanNM.

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Doug Thompson published his first story and photo at age 11 -- a newspaper article about racism and the Klan in Prince Edward County, VA, in 1958. From that point on, he decided to become a newspaperman and did just that -- reporting news and taking photos full-time at his hometown paper, becoming the youngest full-time reporter at The Roanoke Times in Virginia in 1965 and spent most of the past 55+ years covering news around the country and the globe. After a short sabbatical as a political operative in Washington in the 1980s, he returned to the news profession in 1992. Today, he is a contract reporter/photojournalist for BHMedia and owns Capitol Hill Blue and other news websites.

The selection was probably more related to the Skull and Bones holding of Geronimo’s bones at their ‘tomb” in CT, according to reports that also note George HW Bush was involved in the secreting of said bones at the Yale S&B home site in the Homeland.

Does it offend American First Peoples? Probably. It offended me, but the sad truth is that the entire Native American population is so inured to such monikers that they have too much thick skin to worry about it. After all, Geronimo was a great warrior, an outstanding tactician, and a leader of his people. And Geronimo lacked the psychopathy to inflict terror on a populace as he just fought for his people’s right to fair treatment at the hands of the US Government.

It is more likely that I am offended by it, because having grown up with the Native population in MN, the use of any historic figure attached to a good or bad man was just senseless to me, unless referring to the actual person. Why not just use a nickname that is a made up word. Like Marfanman (in recognition of his kidney disease), AtoZ (Al Qaeda to Zombie?) You know, he was reported dead many times, starting in 2001, and keeps on dying on demand.

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